Kids Support Kids to Find Clinical Research Solutions

“Tell me, I'll forget. Show me, I may remember. But involve me, and I'll understand.” The meaning behind this
Chinese proverb is the driving force of CentennialX—a summer
incubator/accelerator program where teams of high school students tackle industry-specific, real world challenges.
Under the guidance of teachers, students spend their summer dissecting problems and crafting solutions. Through the
process of design
thinking, the students internalize and understand the issues they are given.

Since its inaugural program three years ago, Lilly has worked with CentennialX student teams on real clinical
research problems. This year, Lilly’s team—TriALL—was charged
with helping the International Children’s Advisory Network (iCAN)
develop a solution that provides an improved communication feedback loop between pediatric clinical trial
researchers and iCAN’s youth advocacy chapters.

Currently, iCAN relies on surveys to gather feedback from pediatric research participants and caregivers on their
clinical trial experiences. Unfortunately, the surveys are often the end of the road when it comes to
communication, leaving participants wondering if their feedback is being heard. This is where TriALL comes in.
Their goal is to create a solution that fosters a personal connection between pediatric patients and researchers
that provides the children a sense of reassurance that their feedback is being listened to and used to improve
clincial trial design.

To kick off their design thinking approach, the TriALL team went straight to the source—the annual iCAN Research and Advocacy Summit in Orlando, Florida. At the summit,
the TriALL students facilitated a one-hour workshop with iCAN’s members from around the world. During the workshop,
the TriALL team empowered the iCAN kids to share their insights and feelings on the current state of the feedback
process and led a discussion to develop ideas for potential solutions and improvements.

Lilly’s Joe Kim and CentennialX’s Rena Friedant discuss the role of design thinking in the CentennialX challenge.

The thoughtful and enthusiastic response from the iCAN members demonstrated that this problem is not the only one
that they felt passionately about solving, but one that they’ve spent time thinking about prior to the workshop.
With the help of the TriALL student team and a design thinking structure, they were provided with the forum and
tools necessary to articulate their ideas and have their voices heard. Through this experience, kids from both
sides of table—the CentennialX team and iCAN members—played an active role in looking at an issue, listening to
each other’s ideas and determining potential solutions.

The TriALL team huddles to prepare for their workshop at the iCAN Summit.

The TriALL team is now back home in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, using the learnings from the summit to inform their
pitch for an improved feedback process for iCAN. Stay tuned for more details on their pitch to come in a few weeks.
In the meantime, check out our iCAN Summit
highlights.

Comments

Leigh Anne Naas 08/30/17

Thanks for sharing this tweet chat opportunity, Janelle! Sounds like a great topic. We’ll pass the information along to the CentennialX team.

Janelle Bowden 08/29/17

I love this story, and great to see some out of the box thinking. Maybe the TriALL team can join the #AusCT twitterchat Thursday 6pm 31Aug which is all about clinical trials with a children and young people and share some of their learnings. I would definitely like to hear more!